Born: August 12, 1919
Died: December 31,1971
Achievements: Considered the Father of the Indian space program;
instrumental in establishing the Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) in
Ahmedabad in November 1947; was Chairman of the Atomic Energy
Commission. He along with other Ahmedabad-based industrialists played a
major role in the creation of the Indian Institute of Management,
Ahmedabad.
Vikram Sarabhai was one of the greatest scientists of India. He is
considered as the Father of the Indian space program. Apart from being a
scientist, he was a rare combination of an innovator, industrialist and
visionary.
Vikram Ambalal Sarabhai was born on August 12, 1919 at Ahmedabad in an affluent
family of progressive industrialists. He was one of eight children of
Ambalal and Sarla Devi. He had his early education in a private school,
Retreat run by his parents on Montessori lines. Some of the
great men of India such as Gurudev Rabindranath, J. Krishna Murthi,
Motilal Nehru, V. S. Shrinivasa Shastri, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sarojini
Naidu, Maulana Azad, C. F. Andrews, C. V. Raman et al. used to stay with
the Sarabhai family when they visited Ahmedabad. Mahatma Gandhi also
once stayed at their house while recovering from an illness. Visits by
such great men greatly influenced Vikram Sarabhai.
After his matriculation, Vikram Sarabhai proceeded to Cambridge for his college education and
took the tripos in Natural Sciences from St. John's college in 1940. When World War II began,
he returned home and joined as a research scholar under Sir C. V. Raman at the Indian Institute of Science,
Bangalore His interest in solar physics and cosmic ray led him to set up
many observation stations around the country. He built the necessary
equipment with which he took measurements at Bangalore, Poona and the
Himalayas. He returned to Cambridge in 1945 and completed his Ph.D in
1947.
Vikram Sarabhai was instrumental in establishing the Physical Research
Laboratory (PRL) in Ahmedabad in November 1947. The laboratory was
established in a few rooms in M.G. Science Institute of the Ahmedabad
Education Society, which was founded by his parents. Subsequently, it
got support from the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
(CSIR) and the Department of Atomic Energy.
Vikram Sarabhai did research on the time variations of cosmic rays and
concluded that meteorological effects could not entirely affect the
observed daily variations of cosmic rays; further, the residual
variations were wide and global and these were related to variations in
solar activity. Vikram Sarabhai visualized a new field of research
opening up in solar and interplanetary Physics.
The year 1957-1958 was designated as International Geo-physical year
(IGY). The Indian program for the IGY had been one of the most
significant ventures of Sarabhai. It exposed him to the new vistas of
space science with the launching in 1957 of Sputnik-I. Subsequently, the
Indian National Committee for Space Research was created, of which
Vikram Sarabhai became Chairman.
With active support from Homi Bhabha, Vikram Sarabhai, set up the first
Rocket Launching station (TERLS) in the country at Thumba near
Thiruvananthapuram on the Arabian Coast, as Thumba is very close to the
Equator. The first rocket with sodium vapour payload was launched on
November 21, 1963. In 1965, the UN General Assembly gave recognition to
TERLS as an international facility.
After the sudden death of Homi Bhabha in an air crash, Vikram Sarabhai
was appointed Chairman, Atomic Energy Commission in May 1966. He wanted
the practical application of science to reach the common man. He decided
to acquire competence in advance technology for the solution of countrys
problems based on technical and economic evaluation of its real
resources. He initiated Indias space programme, which today is
renowned all over the world.
Dr. Vikram Sarabhai was awarded with Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Medal in
1962 and Padma Bhushan in 1966. Vikram Sarabhai passed away in his sleep
on December 31,1971.
|